The DV Rebel's Guide 51
Michael Flynn writes "The DV Rebel's Guide is broken down into chapters that follow the basic timeline of a
film's production. The first chapter covering the overall philosophy of the authors
approach and the rest focused on the making of your film: Pre-production,
Production and Post production. A great deal of the book is focused, to
very good effect, on post production."
Read on for the rest of Michael's review
Stu Maschwitz is one of the founders of The Orphanage. A
visual effects house with credits in such films as Sin City, The Day After
Tomorrow, and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Prior to founding The
Orphanage, Stu had a stint at ILM.
The DV Rebel's Guide | |
author | Stu Maschwitz |
pages | 320 |
publisher | Peachpit Press |
rating | 9 |
reviewer | Michael Flynn |
ISBN | 0321413644 |
summary | A` step by step guide to making your own film |
Stu's writing style is very easygoing and at times irreverent. Regarding his short film that he includes on the DVD, he points out "The Last Birthday Card was made on an Apple G3 and took over two days to render. I chose to take these enforced breaks from working on my film as opportunities to strike up a new hobby, one that I still practice today: staring at my After Effects progress bar".
In each chapter, a number of Hollywood action films is referenced. At the end of each chapter, the films that are mentioned are listed so that the reader can put them onto their NetFlix list or run over to the local video store and rent them to see first hand, the techniques that are referenced.
His pragmatic approach to getting the job done and using whatever tools are at hand or that you can build is highly effective. My only complaint is that there are a number of specifics regarding After Effects that are not covered in Stu's book. To his defense, this is not an After Effects tutorial. You are expected to know how to use AE before your dive into Stu's methods.
His suggestions for examining the area around you to utilize as much of what you have at hand is unique and effective. Suggesting the use of glass elevators for simulating crane master shots as well as people movers in airports for dolly shots is exemplary of the approach. Additionally, for the wood working inclined filmmaker, a very nice design is included for building a hand-holding rig for your DV camera (Stu eschews hand holding a DV camera due to the light weight that generally translates to a very shaky image).
The book details adding effects that Stu used in his short film "The Last Birthday Card". The film illustrates a number of useful techniques such as compositing a helicopter into a scene, practical bullet hits and squib simulations. He also includes high quality squib footage on the DVD for the rebel filmmaker to use in his/her own projects.
The last section of the book covers color correction in great detail. It provides techniques for using the color correction tools in After Effects as well as using a layered approach to this process. To illustrate the approaches that he suggests, he provides a number of After Effects projects on the DVD that the reader can use to follow along with the examples.
Stu also, wisely, includes one of the chapters of the book on the DVD in PDF format. This is the camera chapter. With DV cameras changing at such a rapid pace, this allowed him to provide very up to date information on DV cameras that might have been obsolete by the time the book had come back from the printer.
He provides a number of very nice scripts and presets on the DVD for a variety of effects as well as tools for color correcting. The film strip script that allows you to compare a number of shots at once for color/look management is particularly nice.
Finally,Stu maintains a lively message board devoted to the book where folks can ask questions and Stu is very prompt about providing answers. Having read over 200 books on film making, this book is the only one that will end up on the set of my next film.
You can purchase The DV Rebel's Guide: An All-Digital Approach to Making Killer Action Movies on the Cheap from amazon.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Talent? (Score:1, Insightful)
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There's talk about directing actors in general (with the author recommending "Directing Actors" by Judith Weston), but face it - if you're a DV Rebel (low-budget-indy-filmmaker), you don't really have the funds whereby a chapter on this would be relevant. Your talent consists of a roster of friends, theatre/filmschool buddies, and family.
I own this book, bought it a weeks ago after listening to an interview with the author. Frankly, what a great purchase. It's one of the
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The best pickup line: (Score:2)
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What can I learn from this book to make that look even better than it is?
Don't cast yourself in the film?
BWAH HA HA HA HA! :)
Aaahh, I crack me up.
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Um, maybe the book talks about what will happen when you turn 14 next year?
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Wouldn't you go Analog? (Score:2)
If I were a DV Rebel, wouldn't I go all analog?
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Sounds more like "porn movie on the cheap" to me.
Damn, done it again...
Do not expose your sex obsession in public, Do not expose your sex obs...
Sounds like a good book (Score:1)
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On the El Mariachi DVD, there was a special feature called something like "The 10-minute film school of Robert Rodriguez". It probably talks about some of the stuff in his book, like how not to waste film. For example, if somebody throws a gun up to a balcony, but misses the balcony - don't throw the f
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On the El Mariachi DVD, there was a special feature called something like "The 10-minute film school of Robert Rodriguez". It probably talks about some of the stuff in his book, like how not to waste film.
I regularly show this to my students before they undertake a week of guerilla-style indie videomaking. It's a review of some raw footage from El Mariachi analysing how he pulled it off. It's full of tricks that translate from 16mm to DV, because they're about being cheap, cheap, cheap. As he puts it, "once you start that money hose flowing, it's hard to shut it off." The main thing is to be able to shoot with the edit in mind: the same scene from multiple angles to make it look like you have more cameras;
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Good lord, do you realize how obvious something like that is?
When I was a kid, I used to make silent Super-8 movies without the ability to edit. Think about that. Not only does the movie has to be shot in sequence, but every shot has to be correct. You get one take, and that's all.
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Foreword (Score:2)
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$30 Film School (Score:3, Interesting)
Another great reference, if you're interested, is $30 Film School [amazon.com] by Michael Dean. I bought it a couple years ago when I was going to make a short film (I still am; it's just on the back-burner right now).
This is the best way I can think of to stick it to the MPAA, though: Go make your OWN movie! You won't make any money, but DIY stuff always makes you feel good.
Re:$30 Film School -- 100 PERCENT CORRECT! (Score:2)
Too bad IBM trademarked PC and the population went to sleep. Next thing I knew the PC was lost in the corporate dungeons and the tubes of the internets.
There was a brief moment, when Babylon 5 was using the Amiga to create it's Computer Graphics, that I thought the breakout could still occur. New sound cards were coming out, and I thought musicians would take advantage of
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I think you're right on a lot of points. For instance I was reading a few weeks ago that the top CDs sold 30,000 copies recently. A few years ago that wouldn't have been enough to land a CD in the top 30. So sales, and the money, are dropping. Like you, I see hope in this for an independant future.
The computer is such a powerful tool and its cost is steadily dropping. I think of characters like Gollum from Lord Of The Rings and the backgrounds from
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If you think rap musicians are the only ones who took to the computer to create music, you could not be more wrong.
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I believe you, I just don't see much evidence here. What are you seeing and in what locations?
Kill 2 Birds With One Stone (Score:2)
It's really not clear from this review... (Score:4, Informative)
Yes. It's worth it anyway. (Score:3, Interesting)
If you're not using After effects, what are you using? The book concentrates on getting professional level finishing and effects out of prosumer level tools. Basically, with the finishing chapter, he's showing you how to replace a Smoke with AE and some elbow grease. If you're using something higher end (Flame/Nitris/Nuke/etc), it probably got
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Writing (Score:1)
The only way to make a film is to have an idea. Anything else is just a waste of time.
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Speaking of DV (Score:2)
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They are HDV/DV switchable (or at least the one we have at work is; Sony Z1)
MiniDV is okay but the sound isn't locked (1/2 frame of drift is the permissable error in the spec.)
Trouble is that downgrading from HDV to DV can look a bit weird.
We think that HDMI will replace IEEE1394 to harmonize equipment connectivity (not many IEEE1394 TVs around).
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HDMI is a lossy (loss tolerant?) uncompressed digital transmission system for consumer displays with no error correction and no clock synchronisation, from which it would be quite difficult to reconstruct the exact same frame as was transmitted, it also (AFAIK) has no form of time-code or playback control system.
IEEE-1394 is a multi-peer bus architecture, which supports lossless transmis
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Re:What camera to get (Score:2)
If you're really planning on making a movie, or need to shoot long form stuff,, get an HDV camera. The new cameras (like the canon HV20) are around $1100, small and have HDMI ports , so you can plug 'em right into your plasma/whatever, but of more interest to pro video folk (and most likely nerds) you can capture right off the sensor via
Peripheral Note: Hash Animation:Master (Score:2)
I think one of the most overlooked tools for an amateur filmmaker is Martin Hash's Animation Master [hash.com]. $300 (cheaper for students). True, it's sold as an animation product, but you can load up your video as a rotoscope and animate (or just plain tinker) over the top of it. People sell "titling" software for more than that, and you can assuredly do the most whizbang titling you can imagine with this feature-jammed package, plus a whole lot more.
On the downside, any full-featured animation software is darn co
There are better books (Score:2)